Safety in the LNG Value Chain

Share This Post:

Preview Webinar:

In this webinar, presenters describe and examine potential LNG (liquefied natural gas) hazards and risk-reduction methods for the LNG value chain ― production and consumption. Included are examples for liquefaction, transportation (pipelines, marine tankers and trucks), storage and re-gasification, both onshore and offshore. As LNG becomes a more viable option for meeting energy needs around the world, the associated risks must be evaluated and mitigated. In the U.S. for example, development of new technology for recovery of natural gas has changed the economics so drastically that we have gone from building LNG import terminals to exporting LNG in less than a decade. The abundance of LNG has even made its use as a vehicle fuel one of the fastest growing applications.

Dr. Melhem holds a Ph.D. and an M.S. in Chemical Engineering, as well as a B.S. in Chemical Engineering with a minor in Industrial Engineering, all from Northeastern University. In addition, he has completed executive training in the areas of Finance and Strategic Sales Management at the Harvard Business School.Read more

Henry Ozog is the general partner of ioMosaic Corporation and is an expert in process safety and risk management, process hazard analysis, including hazard and operability studies, failure mode and effect analysis, fault tree analysis, layer of protection analysis, quantitative risk analysis and facility siting. He has a M.S. and B.S. in Chemical Engineering, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.Read more

Once the content has been viewed and you have attested to it, you will be able to download and print a certificate for PDH credits.
If you have already viewed this content,
please click here
to login.

Checkout

Do you already own this?

Pricing

Individuals

AIChE Member Credits

1

AIChE Members

$69.00

AIChE Undergraduate Student Members

Free

AIChE Graduate Student Members

Free

Non-Members

$99.00

Webinar content is available with the kind permission of the author(s) solely for the purpose of furthering AIChE’s mission to educate, inform and improve the practice of professional chemical engineering. All other uses are forbidden without the express consent of the author(s).